Stack of (only a very few) of my journals. Top one has French muslin (used)
tea bags attached.
I have kind an an indoor/outdoor studio space.
After a chilly, foggy cold SF summer, we are having a lovely heatwave.
(80" in SF is considered a heat wave and the locals are swooning).

Stack of Chinese Boxes in my studio.

Stack of out-going mail.

Stack of incoming mail (collected over the years).

Stack of vintage books on studio work table.

Stack of vintage language flash cards. I love these things. I keep thinking if I sleep with the cards under my pillow I might absorb the languages. It hasn't worked yet.

Stack of inspiration books.

Check out my pal Corrine's blog for some cool stacksdosfishes
I was reading dosfishes this morning with my coffee and found out about the Stacks!

So, thanks to Seth and The Altered Page for thinking this fun project up.
Now that I see all the stacks I have sitting around I wonder if I should have gone to the Library Big Book Sale yesterday to get more?

Next post will be outgoing mail, results of the Big Book Sale, a score in Chinatown and some shots of the Correspondence Co-Op meeting happening here in San Francisco tonight.

Thanks for the comments, everyone! Those Chinese boxes seem to be popular. I have loved them for years. I haunt the markets in Chinatown and on Clement Street here in San Francisco and look for cool boxes. Many of them had tea in them and are made from cardboard.. I have a collection on tin boxes as well and the best time to find them is around the Moon Festival, which was last week.

@Thanks, everyone.@Stephrudolph--don't forget, you can repurpose junk mail for mail art and those designs inside security envelopes are especially fun.@iamrushmore--maybe I will send you some of the language flash cards, in the mail of course.

I fell head over heels in love with your Chinese boxes. I also liked how you showed stacks of mail art in various stages of completion. Lovely to see. Sorry I'm late arriving, but I've been taking a long look at all the stacks.